The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, June 15, 1906, Image 9

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN.
FRIDAY, JUNE 15.
KEELY’S
KEELY’S
KEELY’S
KEELY’S
KEELY’S
KEELY’S
An Extraordinary Sale of New Shoes
Positively the Most Attractive Offering We Have Made This Season. Come Tomorrow.
All Sizes and
All .Widths in the
Jne at Present
Writing. Come
Early Before the
Assortments Are Broken
'WMA
The sale began with a rush this morning, and throngs
of wise buyers crowded the shoe section to secure these new
and very stylish low-cut shoes at the bargain price. Every
visitor declares that such values in seasonable and desir
able footwear have never before been seen in Atlanta.
The sale embraces about half a dozen styles, two of which
are shown in the accompanying illustrations. Two,three and
four-strap sandals with vamps of fine patent kid or colt and
uppers of dull mat kid, and the new cross-strap sandals of all
patent kid. All have full French heels and turned soles. We
will also include in the sale 200 pairs of ribbon ties of fine
kid in the new shade of brown—Cuban heels, turned soles.
These shoes are from leading manufacturers and are
made of excellent quality leathers. Workmanship is care
ful throughout, shapes distinctly stylish and fit perfect.
They are in light and medium weights—ideal for dress or
semi-dress wear throughout the summer. ,
These shoes are regular $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 values,
and were made up for this season’s selling at regular
prices. We secured the line at manufacturers’ surplus
sales and paid very much less than usual wholesale
prices for them. They are offered in this sale at
Choice, $1.49.
As This Sale
Is For Complete
Clearance, None
Will Be Sent On
Approval or Sold
Subject to Return or Exchange.
See the Window Display of
the New Brown Shoes that Smart
Dressers are Now Wearing.
-■ Keely Company
A Few More Pairs of the
Mens $3 to $4 Shoes at $2.25
Left for Tomorrow.
BIRMINGHAM, ALA.
The marriage of tiles Foy Wllkereon
•nil Mr. Henry Perry Johnston Wed-
nnday afternoon of last week came as
• surprise to their friends, as all an
nouncements concerning It had been
lor Thursday afternoon. For more than
• "eek Mr. Johnston had not been
feeling well, and Wednesday morning
• serious Illness seemed threatening.
All preparations for a beautiful home
wedding were stopped, and the young
peonle were quietly married at ( o'clock
Wednesday afternoon. Rev. A. J. Dick
inson performing the ceremony, at tho
home of the bride's parents. Dr. and
Mrs. James Hunter Dewberry. Mr.
Johnsion Is being carefully taken care
"I at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Dew
herry. He Is much better now and Is
able t„ be up, Mr. and Mrs. Johnston
hope to go to; Virginia»within a few.
days. This marriage was of much In-
and adjoining states.
Many beautiful and handsome gifts
testified to the popularity of both.
Among the out-of-town guests who had
arrived for the wedding were: Mr. and
Mrs. \V. J. Gilmore and little daugh-
Plerson, of Brundldge, Ala.: Mr. Young
Wllkereon. of Luverne. Ala.: Miss Dai
sy, Pierson, of Troy, Ala., and Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Tankeraley, of Jacksonville,
Fla.
A beautiful home wedding yesterday
afternoon at 5 nUJock was the marriage
’, daugh-
of Miss Virgil Richards Terry,
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe McConnell,
and Mr. Eugene Reynolds Lyde. Rev.
Thomas Beard performed the cere
mony. The attendants were: Misses
Nora Shaw, Peart Shannon and Bessie
Lyde. The maid of honor 'was Miss
Bessie Walton. The groomsmen were
Messrs. Robert Fulford, Edward Mar
tin and John Mashburn. Mr. and ifrs.
and on their return home will be wl
Mr. and Mrs. McConnell.
At. the first Presbyterian 1 Church,
Tuesday evening, occurred the mar
riage of Miss Sadie Mai Wilson and
Mr. Thomas Mlall Allen. The attend
ants were: Miss May Hamilton, of
Jackson, Miss.; Misses Carrie and
Rowena Allen, of Tampa. Fla. Miss
Annie Parker Beattie, of Memphis, was
unable to attend on account of Illness.
Miss Ruth Wilson Was maid of honor
and Mrs. C. B. Cross, matron of honor.
The ushers were Messrs. Albert Phelps.
Addison Jones, John W. Wood and Ed
ward T. Baird. Rev. Mr. Flynn, of
the Vine Htreet Presbyterian Church,
performed the ceremony. Mrs. Allen
b the daughter of Mrs. P. 8. Wilson.
After the ceremony the young couple
left for a trip to Atlanta, Washington,
Philadelphia and New York City. They
will live at $10 Tuskaloosa avenue on
their return to the city. There were
several out-of-town guests: Mr. A. J.
several out-of-town guests: Mr. A. J.
Gayle, of Tupelo, Miss.; Mrs. E. H.
Cross and children, of Gadsden; Mr.
aim Mrs. W. K. Fraser, of Winfield,
Ala.; Mrs. Kate Hodges, Master Coop-
Hodges Allen, and the bridesmaids.
Miss Marlon Baker, of u*„i„,u,,, .—
with Mr. and Mrs. John C. Forney, >10
South Twentieth street.
Mr. and Mrs. J. If. Harrison have
gone io Niagara Falls, New York, Bos
ton and other Eastern points.
Miss Elisa Parker, of Courtland,
a i lisas pdiau rniitoi, ut >,uui iiuuu.
Ore., Is the guest of Miss Vernon
Marks, 8outh Fourteenth street.
Miss Lynda May Handley has re
turned from Greensboro,
Mr. Benjamin Carter, of Washington,
D. C., Is the guest of his brother. Post
master J. Rivers Carter.
Miss Roberta Adams Is In Montgom-
Miss Jesse K. Wood, of Wood lawn,
has gone to Madison, WIs.
Miss Bennie Ploeser will leave nest
week for Blount Springs.
Dr. and Mrs. M. J. Lunquest are vis
iting In the rlty.
The marrl
Vigo and Mr. .
take place next Monday evening at 7:10
o'clock at the residence of the bride's
mother, Mrs. Julia Vigo, 2011 Avenue
O. The ceremony will beperformed by
Rev. Father Caasady, of Tuscaloosa, In
the presence of relatives and their most
Intimate friends.
Mr. J. H. Weatherly announces the
engagement of his daughter, Eugenia,
to Mr. John W. King, the wedding to
IV Dll. DVIIII vv • nilWi kill* vvruuiiiH id
take place June Z7 at 10 o'clock a.m.
Miss Luclle Lane Is visiting Miss
Louise Cobbs In Anniston.
Mrs. John W. Sibley and Miss Helen
Ehrman are at Llthta Springs, Os.
HAWKIN8VILLE.
Mrs. C. A. Love and son, Stanley, are
visiting In Atlanta.
Miss Anns Bell West, of Atlanta, Is
the gueet of her aunt, Mrs. O. N. Bays
ey.
Mrs. J. H. Taylor will spend some
Mrs. C. W. Harris has reti
Harvard, of Wilmington, N. C.,
Is on a visit to relatives In the city.
Dr. 8. A. Origin and wife, of At
lanta, visited Frank Keeling and Mrs.
Sarah Dykes, of this city.
U I* Uf 11 os lohal- ran
Mrs. C. W. Hatcher and little son, of
Atlanta, are In the city, the guests of
her brother, Dr, W. A. Mathews.
Sheriff J. a Rogers, W. C. Hendley
end D. L. Ragan have gone to Hot
Springs, Ark, to recuperate.
Miss Edna Roberta Is spending her
vacation at home. 1 She has been teach
ing in the public schools 6f Waycrose.
LAWRENCEVILLE.
home on Perry street.
Colonel R. II. Fountain visited hie pa-
rents In Atlanln Sunday.
Mrs. Dixon, of Winder, hns been the
guoet of Mr. J. P. Byrd, of our city,
for eevcral days.
Ml--.- pc.ul .ml N <■ ] I I'.i.iprr, of
Athens, have been the guests of their
brother, W. O. Cooper, for several
Miss Pearl Williams spent several
days with friends In Loganevllle last
■ Dr. V. O. Hopkins Is on a visit to
Savannah.
Miss May Bagwell Is vlstllng at Au»
burn.
It often happens thnt malls fror»
New York to Buenos Ayres require
from foul- lo live »™kc for delivery.
FORECAST OF THE BOOK THAT STARTLED THE NATION
THE JUNGLE." SINCLAIRS GREAT EXPOSE OF THE STOCK YARDS
Thrilling Tale of Packingtozon
That Tells of Packers’ Crime
Begins in Georgian Monday.
W
BITTEN purely as a novel by
a man whose soul revolted
against the methods employ-
” In the great Chicago packing in-
dusiry, - The jungle," Upton Sinclair's
* hlch The Atlanta Georgian will
pegln printing serially Monday, baa
r* ln printing serially Mol
“econte a human document.
_JU W worka delve deeper Into actual
fondittotta; few have had the treraen-
“om effect exerted by thla one, which
, ,ri >ueed the Federal government to
» realisation that tha people of the
timed States are being systematically
WMioned by so-called food tinned In
p *[ltlngtown."
,1.1?™ •*. * n absorbing Interest to
Lv, hnok. It points facts In all their
“Weousness, describes conditions In the
•Jpvk yards, lays bare the criminal
"Fthods la preparing food, yet does It
*" n s manner that grips the attention
} >he reader and take* Mm from hi*
'My chair to the polluted atmosphere
of 'he beef establishments.
Through Mr. Sinclair's powerful por-
25*1 the way In which Chicago's
jyrklng magnates endanger the lives
w mllllooa, the reader may see. as un-
ffl* mlscroscope, the Intricacies and
... f‘ c ***°** °f * system against
jmch tha wrath of all honest men has
;?'n directed He may see far more
A*n the government Investigation h ie
• r disclosed, lie may sec and have *
a full appreciation of the things’ which
this Investigation should disclose.
There Is no dry, stilled chapter In
this remarkable work. In Its writing,
Mr. Sinclair avoided making It a
mere catalogue. He clothed hie facts
—and they were proved to be facta
by Investigators engaged by the pub
lishers—In a garb that attracts. Yet
not once does he deviate from hit
course.
He reaches hla goal—the lucid. In
teresting exposure of the men who are
today buying palaces and every com
fort of life with the money they obtain
from both rich and poor who buy thalr
pernicious product*. He tells how—
and tells It vividly—the packers em
ploy the maxim—
"There's no meat too bad to use!"
To the mind of a man who Is not
cognisant of the tremendous crime be-
cofniuiiii w mi® _
Ing committed agalnat^humAn^decancy
by these houses. "The Jungle" wli.
prove a fascinating wab of romance
and fact.
BOOK THAT HAS an
gered BEEF TRUST REVEALS
PACKINGTOWN'S SECRETS.
The story takes tbs reader. In tha
very first chapter. Into that myste
rious region known as "Back of the
Yards." In Chirac a section redolent
of far-off Llli.uanU. A welding f'.a.t
ed to celebrate the union of “one
of God's gentlest creatures,” Ona Lu-
koixalte, and Jurgls Rukkus.
"She stood In the doorway, shep
herded by Cousin Matija, breathless
from pushing through the crowd, and.
lit her happiness, painful to look upon.
eyes, and her Hpe trembled, and her
otherwise wan little face was flushed.
She wore a muslin dress, conspicuous
ly white, and a stiff little veil coming
lo her shoulders. There were five
pink paper roses twlstad In her veil,
and eleven blight green rose leaves.
There were new white cotton gloves
upon her hands, and as she stood
stating about her, she twisted them
together feverishly. It was almost
too much for her—you could see the
pain of too great emotion In her face
and all rite tremor of her form. She
was so young—not quits sixteen—and
small for her age,, a mere child; and
she bad Just been married—endmar-
rled to Jt
_urgis, of all men—to Jurgls
Rukkus, he with the white flower In
the button hole of his new black
suit; ha with tha mighty shoulders
and the giant hands.''
Thus with simple yet beautiful
word-painting, the novelist brings one
Into Intimate touch with these humble
dly ki
folk who, hardly knowing what they
do, aid tha mercantile ghouls of Pack-
Ingtown to poison a nation—perhaps.
Pictures Quaint Feast. ,
iTomssxius Kuszlelka Is at the wed
ding feast. He Is an Inspired musi
cian. although he haa no main on
I hla bow and hla decrepit violin walla
out of tune. But they sing to hla mu
sic. the- dance to It, and Ona alts by.
Ing. flushed, while Marijs. who
Cork* In s canning factory and all
md:< a tana weighing 11
pounda, puffs and blows In her en
deavor to give the broad-faced Lith
uanians and Poles and other hard
working foreigners all they can cat
and drink.
Anlanus Rukkus, aged, and with a
cough that the fetid atmosphere of a
Chicago pickle house has not abated.
Is there. He le the father of the
bridge room. He once was a scholar,
but the grind and grime of the days
In Packlngtown havs given him no
opportunity to write love letters for
the neighbors, and all he can do now
Is to make a speech and sink wearily
back Into hla chair.
The story continues;
"The company pairs off quickly, and
the whole room Is soon In motion.
Apparently nobody knows how
waits, but that Is nothing of any con
sequence. There is music, and they
dance, each as he pleases, just as be-
icy sang. Moat of them prefer
fore they
the two-etep, especially tha young,
with whom It Is the fashion. The
older people have dances from home,
strange and complicated steps which
they execute with grave solemnity.
Borne do not dance anything at all,
but simply hold each other's bands
and allow the undisciplined Joy of
motion to express Itself with their
feet. Among these ore Jokubss Used-
viiss and his
wife, Lnclja, who to,
■ether keep the delicatessen store, and
consume nearly as much as they sell;
they are tao fat to danco, but they
stand In the middle nt the floor, hold
Ing each other fast In their arms,
rocking slowly from side to side and
rocking slowly from
grinning seraphlcslly, a picture
toothless and perspiring ecstacy.
— Ales Ji
of
"There Is Ales Jaasltyts, for
ounce, who has danced unending hours
with Jnoxas Rarxlus, lo whom sha
Is engaged. Ales Is the beauty of
the »■■ enlnx. snd she would be really
beautiful If -he were n ,t -• proud
ulst, a In
represents, perhaps, half a week’s la
bor painting cans. She holds her skirt
with her hand as she dances with
stately precision, after the manner of
the grandes dames. Juosas Is driving
ons or Durham's wagons, snd Is mak
ing big wages. Its affects s "tough"
aspect; wearing his hat on one side
and keeping a cigarette In hie mouth
all the evening. Then there Is Jad-
vygs Marclnkus, who Is also beau
tiful, but humble."
“I’ll Work Harder."
A (rouble’ usual In Packlngtown
among tha nnrortunata slavers In tha
factories occurs. Jurgls and his folks
see the bills mounting as the food and
drink have lo be replenished, and
Jurgls comforting hla ' bride, says
merely:
"Don’t worry, little one. I will work
harder."
Perhaps he could work harder. But
the man who watched him, as s practi
cal overseer, would not believe It. The
story, still dealing with the life of the
people and wltn
tba festivity, con
tinues:
As tints goes on then Is a variety of
drunkenness, among tbs young men es
pecially. Borne stagger about In each
words;
dogger si
whlsperin
and havs to be pulled apart. Now the
fat policeman wakens definitely, and
feels of his club to sea that It la ready
for business. Hs haa to be prompt—
tor lha J-o’cJoefc-ln-tJja-mornlng fights,
If they ones get out of hand, an like
a forest fin, and may mean tha whole
reserves at the station. The only thing
to do la to crack every fighting bead
that you see, before tnen an so many
fighting heads that you cannot crack
ty of them.
■Then la but scant account kept of
encked heads In b;u y of the ver./v,
for men who have to crack the beads
ul animals all da> m t„ get Into the
Story of “Home of Poisoned
Meat” Aroused National
Congress to Take Action.
habit, and to pnctlre on ihelr friends,
and even on their families between
times. Thla makes It a causa for con-
gntulatlon that by modern methods a
vary few men can do tha painfully nec
essary work of head-crscklng for tba
whole of the cnltund world.
"There Is no fight that night—per-
Jurgls, too, Is watchful—
haps because ,
oven mon so than ths policeman. Jur
ats!, as any ons
gts has drunk s gnat .___
naturally would on an occasion when
It all has to be paid for, whethsr It Is
man, and doss not easily lose i
only once there Is s tight
Is the fault of Marijs Ber-
and that Is the fault of ,
csynskss. Msrtjs has apparently con,
eluded about two hours ago that It tha
altar In the corner with the deity In
soiled white be not the true home of
the muses, It la, at any rata, tlM nearest
substitute on earth obtainable.
there come to her
the villains who have not lytld that
night. Marijs goes on the wai
straight off, without even tha prelimi
nary of a good cursing, and when she
la pulled off it is with the coat collars
of two villains In her hands. Fortu
nately the policeman la disposed to be
nable, and so It Is not Marfja who
ng out of th" place.”
lllty
drunkenness of these people who are
Kl "Und .1- rh„ tilth, in.-at tnev mould
■ <ii I i -., y I- gr-oinil, h, .t .t.-in. a
au nt Min, Inn, Ill, It III.,, <I,i not un
derstand, Jurgls stands by hi- little
wife, who is half fainting. They wait
for s carriage. None comes. The
ending nf ths celebration Is thus de
scribed by tha author;,
"Thera Is almost no farewell the
dancers do not notice them, and all of
the children and many of the old folks
have fallen asleep of sheer exhaustion.
Dede Ananas Is asleep, nnd so are the
Ssedvllaees, husband and wife, the for
mer snoring In octaves. There Is Teta
Klsbleta. and Mnrljn, sobbing loudly;
and then there Is only ’.he silent night,
with ths stars beginning >•• pal.- lit
tle In the easL Jurgl-. » Ithuut a word,
lifts Ona In his arms and strides out
with her. snd she sinks her head upon
his shoulder with a muon. Whe
retches horns he Is
•he he* fainted or li
he has to hold her w
he unlocks the floor
IS opened her eyes,
"’You shall
day. little ..ne
climbs the stal
arm In t
■Hu
It
he
•d. Thi
the
■re her again: Leave
Vf it to me I will esra
-J will work harder, ”
—